Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, University of Oxford, Warneford Lane, Oxford, OX3 7JX, UK.
Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2021 Apr;56(4):593-604. doi: 10.1007/s00127-020-01933-6. Epub 2020 Aug 18.
Parenting behaviours-including the extent to which parents are protective, hostile, or caring-likely impacts whether a child develops a sense of vulnerability that carries forward into adulthood. Ideas of vulnerability are a contributory factor to the occurrence of paranoia. Our aim was to assess whether there is an association between specific parenting behaviours and paranoia.
We examined cross-sectional associations of parenting and paranoia in an epidemiologically representative cohort of 10,148 adolescents (National Comorbidity Survey-Adolescents; NCS-A) and a second dataset of 1286 adults in Oxfordshire. Further, a network analysis was conducted with paranoia, parenting behaviours, and cognitive-affective variables (compassion, self-esteem, anxiety, and depression). Overprotectiveness, verbal abuse, physical abuse, and amount of care were assessed in mothers and fathers separately.
Nearly all parenting variables were significantly associated with paranoia, with parental verbal and physical abuse showing the largest associations. For example, the odds of reporting paranoia was over four times higher for those in the adult sample reporting a lot of paternal verbal abuse, compared to those reporting none (OR = 4.12, p < 0.001, CI 2.47-6.85). Network analyses revealed high interconnectivity between paranoia, parenting behaviours, and cognitive-affective variables. Of the parenting variables, paranoia most strongly interacted with paternal abuse and maternal lack of care.
There are associations between participants' self-reported experiences of parental behaviours and paranoia. Despite being associated with paranoia, cognitive-affective variables did not appear to mediate the relationship between parenting and paranoia, which is surprising. What might explain the link therefore remains to be determined.
父母的养育行为——包括父母保护、敌对或关爱孩子的程度——可能会影响孩子是否形成一种易感性,这种易感性会延续到成年。易感性是偏执发生的一个促成因素。我们的目的是评估特定的养育行为与偏执之间是否存在关联。
我们在一个具有代表性的 10148 名青少年(国家共病调查-青少年;NCS-A)和牛津郡的 1286 名成年人的二次数据集的横断面研究中,检查了养育和偏执之间的关联。此外,我们还进行了网络分析,包括偏执、养育行为和认知情感变量(同情心、自尊、焦虑和抑郁)。分别评估了母亲和父亲的过度保护、言语虐待、身体虐待和关怀程度。
几乎所有的养育行为变量都与偏执显著相关,父母的言语和身体虐待与偏执的关联最大。例如,与报告没有父亲言语虐待的成年人相比,报告大量父亲言语虐待的成年人报告偏执的可能性高出四倍以上(OR=4.12,p<0.001,CI 2.47-6.85)。网络分析显示偏执、养育行为和认知情感变量之间存在高度的相互联系。在养育行为变量中,偏执与父亲虐待和母亲缺乏关爱最强相关。
参与者自我报告的父母行为经历与偏执之间存在关联。尽管与偏执有关,但认知情感变量似乎并没有在养育和偏执之间的关系中起到中介作用,这令人惊讶。因此,尚不清楚是什么解释了这种联系。